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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

How heart failure lowers pancreatic blood flow in dogs and helps

By Yoshimura, Aritada et al.·Published in Frontiers in veterinary science·2022·Faculty of Agriculture, Japan·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Protective Effect on Pancreatic Acinar Cell by Maintaining Cardiac Output in Canine Heart Failure Model With Decreased Pancreatic Blood Flow.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A dog with heart failure was studied to understand how decreased blood flow to the pancreas could lead to damage. Researchers found that using a medication called pimobendan helped maintain blood flow and cardiac output, which in turn protected the pancreas from changes that could lead to pancreatitis. After four weeks of treatment, the dogs receiving pimobendan showed no signs of pancreatic damage, while those not treated did. This suggests that keeping blood flow steady is important for dogs with heart issues to prevent further complications.

People also search for: dog heart failure treatment · pimobendan for dogs · pancreatitis prevention in dogs

Abstract

Heart failure cause hypoperfusion-induced damage to abdominal organs due to decreased cardiac output (CO). Using a model dog with heart failure caused by rapid ventricular pacing (RVP), we have previously demonstrated that a decrease in CO reduces pancreatic blood flow (PBF). Furthermore, we have revealed that pancreatic acinar cell atrophy, which is a change in the pre-stage of pancreatitis was caused. However, the mechanism by which pancreatic acinar cell atrophy was caused in RVP dogs remains unknown. This study aimed to clarify the association between cardiac function, PBF, and histopathological changes in pancreatic acinar cells by administrating pimobendan, which increase CO, to RVP dogs. RVP dogs were divided into the control group (no medication,= 5) and the pimobendan group (pimobendan at 0.25 mg/kg BID,= 5). Non-invasive blood pressure measurement, echocardiography, and contrast-enhanced ultrasonography for PBF measurement were performed before initiating RVP and at 4 weeks after initiating RVP (4 weeks). At 4 weeks, the decreases in CO, mean blood pressure and PBF due to RVP were suppressed in pimobendan group. Furthermore, histopathological examination showed no changes in pancreatic acinar cells in the pimobendan group. Overall, it was clarified that the decrease in PBF due to cardiac dysfunction was a direct cause of pancreatic acinar cell atrophy. This suggests that maintaining PBF is clinically important for treating dogs with heart failure. In addition, these findings offer a reliable basis for developing new therapeutic strategies for heart failure in dogs, that is, pancreatic protection.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/35909700/